Two-stage evolution of mammalian adipose tissue thermogenesis
0303 health sciences
Eutheria
Thermogenesis
612
Adipose Tissue, Beige
Biological Evolution
Evolution, Molecular
03 medical and health sciences
Marsupialia
Adipose Tissue, Brown
Animals
Humans
Transcriptome
Uncoupling Protein 1
Phylogeny
DOI:
10.1126/science.adg1947
Publication Date:
2024-06-06T17:59:38Z
AUTHORS (15)
ABSTRACT
Brown adipose tissue (BAT) is a heater organ that expresses thermogenic uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) to maintain high body temperatures during cold stress. BAT thermogenesis is considered an overarching mammalian trait, but its evolutionary origin is unknown. We show that adipose tissue of marsupials, which diverged from eutherian mammals
~
150 million years ago, expresses a nonthermogenic UCP1 variant governed by a partial transcriptomic BAT signature similar to that found in eutherian beige adipose tissue. We found that the reconstructed UCP1 sequence of the common eutherian ancestor displayed typical thermogenic activity, whereas therian ancestor UCP1 is nonthermogenic. Thus, mammalian adipose tissue thermogenesis may have evolved in two distinct stages, with a prethermogenic stage in the common therian ancestor linking UCP1 expression to adipose tissue and thermal stress. We propose that in a second stage, UCP1 acquired its thermogenic function specifically in eutherians, such that the onset of mammalian BAT thermogenesis occurred only after the divergence from marsupials.
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CITATIONS (13)
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